Autistic Tampa Student Will Attend His Neighborhood Middle School

November 14, 2012 | 2:07 PM

Henry Frost poses with law enforcement officers while protesting at the Republican National Convention in Tampa. The Hillsborough County school district agreed to allow Frost to attend his neighborhood middle school Tuesday.

After waiting 57 days since the school year began, Henry Frost will be able to cross the street and walk less than the length of two football fields to attend his neighborhood middle school.

Frost is autistic and has several physical impairments, including hearing loss.

After more than 14 hours of meetings to negotiate an education plan and services for Frost, Hillsborough school officials agreed Tuesday to let Frost attend the school of his choice.

“I will go to Wilson. Yes! Thank you and I will write more tomorrow,” Frost wrote on his Facebook page I Stand WITH Henry.

Hillsborough schools wanted him to attend a special program at Coleman Middle School. Frost, and his family, wanted to attend Wilson Middle School in his South Tampa neighborhood.

Frost doesn’t yet know when he can attend classes since the school district must hire an aide first.

His mother, Lauri Hunt, was surprised by the decision. The family had autism advocates such as Ari Ne’emen listening to the meeting by phone to work on Frost’s behalf.

But she was grateful the school district was insisting on services which included a 1-on-1 aide, that staff were trained how to use Frost’s special hearing aide and that Frost had access to a team of specialist in teaching students with hearing loss.

“I do think it’s going to be a better situation…because he’ll have the support he needs,” Hunt said.